NSW Labor Leader, Chris Minns, has sent a message to mark the 201st anniversary of the Greek Revolution this year.
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NSW Labor Leader, Chris Minns, has sent a message to mark the 201st anniversary of the Greek Revolution this year.

Greek Australian writers Patricia Karvelas, Nikki Savva and Christos Tsiolkas are all set to feature at this year’s Sydney Writers Festival which will run from May 16 to May 22 at various Sydney venues such as Carriageworks, City Recital Hall and Sydney Town Hall.
This year’s festival will fall withing what is to be predicted to be in the midst of the soon-to-be-called elections, although that doesn’t cause too much uncertainty for the event as this year’s theme for the festival is “Change my Mind.”

Artistic director Michael Williams said the theme of this year’s festival spoke to the social tone of discourse and debate.
“The reason the theme is ‘change my mind’ not ‘change your mind’ is that it’s a promise and an invitation of entering a new conversation whether that be with a book, a person or event,” says Williams.
“It’s going into it with generosity and reciprocity,”
Source: Sydney Morning Herald

The Authentis: 30 Years at the Helm concert, held at Sydney Town Hall on Friday night to mark 30 years since the enthronement of Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, was a huge success.
The show-stopping event was organised by the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Australia and was attended by over 1,000 people including a number of officials and prominent members of the Greek Australian community.





This included His Eminence Archbishop Makarios of Australia; the High Commissioner of Cyprus, Martha Mavrommatis; Press Counsellor at the Consulate General of Greece in Sydney, Costas Giannakodimos; the Honorary Consul General for Ukraine in Sydney, Jaroslav Duma; Randwick City Councillor, Alexandra Luxford; the Bank of Sydney CEO, Miltos Michaelas; and many other Bishops, clergy and representatives of Greek organisations.
At the start of the night, attendees were treated to a surprise video message from Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew where he praised the Greek community for their support of the Orthodox faith, Greek traditions and the youth in Australia.
Afterwards, renowned Greek maestro, Themos Mexis, walked on stage to conduct the concert.




For over an hour, the audience watched on in awe as the National Metropolitan Choir of Australia (NMCA) and the Sydney Youth Orchestra performed a number of musical pieces including the Greek and Australian National Anthems, Doxa si Kyrie and an orchestral Sousta.
Throughout the night, there were also performances from soloist, Sandy Constandopedos, as well as Tassos Lambrou and Andrew Belekas on the bouzouki, and Antonis Petrantonakis on the lyra.


The grand finale was an incredible show of multiculturalism. The NMCA and Orchestra performed the Ode to Freedom as the Hellenic Lyceum Youth marched in wearing traditional Greek costumes and holding Greek flags. They were followed by The Sydney Thistle Highland Pipe Band who performed a verse of the Ode. This finale was in honour of Greek Independence Day.






At the end of these celebrations, Archbishop Makarios led a small prayer for the people of Ukraine and later gave a small speech where he announced that Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew will visit Australia in 2024 to mark the 100th anniversary since the establishment of the Archdiocese.
This announcement was met with applause, followed by a final standing ovation for Mexis and all the artists who performed on the night.




It was a full house at the Greek Community Club in Lakemba on Friday evening where community members of all ages, distinguished guests and representatives of Greek organisations gathered to commemorate the 201st anniversary from the beginning of the Greek War of Revolution with a special ceremony.
The reception, organised by the Greek Orthodox Community of NSW (GOCNSW) and MC’d by Mrs Artemis Theodoris commenced with the National Anthems of Australia and Greece followed by a minute’s silence in memory of those who have fallen, reciting of poems from students of the Community’s afternoon schools and short speeches by the President of the Greek Orthodox Community of NSW, Harry Danalis; Consular Officer, George Lizidis representing the Consul General of Greece in Sydney, Christos Karras; Minister for Multiculturalism and Minister for Seniors, Mark Coure and Shadow Minister for Industrial Relations and Shadow Minister for Work, Health and Safety Sophie Cotsis representing the NSW Labor Leader, Chris Minns.

Also attending were, Shadow Minister for Better Regulation and Innovation Courtney Houssos MLC, Parliamentary Secretary Peter Poulos, Labor candidate for Reid Sally Sitou, the Mayor of Canterbury Bankstown Khal Asfour, the Mayor of Waverley Council Paula Masselos and councillor of Sutherland Shire Council Haris Strangas.

In his speech, after he gave a brief historical outline of the Greek Revolt and highlighted the values for which Greeks fought to defend their freedom Mr Danalis pointed out that “we’ve been carried away lately to use this day for other purposes.”

“This may be the birthday of some other person, this might be some other event of religious significance but for us the significance of the 25th of March is the uprising of the Greek people for their freedom, for their independence and for their rights. And this is what we always need to keep in mind.”
At the same time, other community members were attending the ‘Authentis’ concert held at the Sydney Town Hall to celebrate the thirty years from the enthronement of the Ecumenical Patriarch.

Addressing the GOCNSW’s event attendees, Minister Coure recognised the importance of community language schools, highlighted the role of ethnic media in keeping the community safe during the pandemic and in passing on the language and culture to future generations.
“I want to see more people in NSW learn a second language and I started that conversation this week,” he said.

Concluding the speeches, NSW Labor’s spokeswoman for industrial relations and work health and safety, Sophie Cotsis, spoke about the important role of women in the Revolution and expressed her pride for her heritage.

“We owe huge debt to those unspoken heroes. The mothers the daughters, the sisters who preferred to be killed than to be enslaved. Who fought, who struggled and suffered for 400 years” she said.

The Community’s dance group under the direction of Mrs Paroula Thurban entertained the crowd before the celebrations ended with a cocktail party.

By Mary Sinanidis
When Greeks band together, they can achieve great things. Freedom from the Ottoman Turks, for one. And Greeks of the diaspora came out in full force on Friday night to celebrate the inaugural Grecian Ball organised by the Greek Community of Melbourne (GCM), the Greek National Day Council of Victoria and the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Australia.
Held at the Grand Hyatt it was a lavish affair, though the world ‘inaugural’ may be deceptive.

Tony Tsourdalakis of the Greek National Day Council of Victoria told the 500 people present that “history tells us that our ancestors and forefathers gathered for a similar event over 86 years ago, back in 1936 at St Kilda Town Hall for the first inaugural Grecian Ball with the likes of Lekatsas, Vendouras, Kostopoulos and many, many others”.
Postponed from last year, the event aimed to celebrate 200 years of Independence from Ottoman Turks but also show how far we have come as migrants. An established community, the people at the Grand Hyatt were a far cry from the simple folk who left Greece behind to create a more prosperous life in Australia.


Back then, there were many struggles, but the Greek community has come a long way. GCM President Bill Papastergiadis said that the Greek community these days enjoys “bipartisan support”, and he thanked the pollies present for all they have done to help finance Greek language development, sports and culture.
Mr Tsourdalakis expressed his gratitude for Premier Daniel Andrews’ support to enable Evzones to come from Greece to Melbourne for Anzac Day. He invited those present to watch out for the programme which would be released over the coming days.

Over the week, attention had been cast on former health minister Jenny Mikakos’ negotiations with Culture and Sports Minister Lina Mendoni who had agreed for artefacts from the National Museum of Athens to be displayed in Australia. Though the antiquities display was to coincide with the Bicentenary of Greece’s Independence it will finally open in April at the Melbourne Museum.
Ms Mikakos told the Greek Herald that she had been on holiday to Greece when she met with Dr Mendoni, who had just assumed office at the time. She expressed her excitement to finally be seeing the display come to fruition.

She smiled graciously as Greek community members rushed to meet her, take a selfie, and show their support. “The inaugural Grecian Ball was a great way for our community to come together and celebrate Greek National Day and everything that Greek culture has contributed to the world. Congratulations to everyone involved in putting on a great event,” she told the Greek Herald.

The hall was full, and the wine flowed freely, though Jorge Menidis told the Greek Herald that there had been some cancellations due to COVID-19. You could hardly tell. For the most part there was joy, especially when Melina Aslanidou took the stage and people partied like there was no COVID, and nothing but happy days ahead.
Greek History
Despite the bright future, it would be remiss to host an event celebrating Greece’s Independence without delving into the past. Mr Papastergiadis showed the link from past to present, by showcasing four themes in the Greek Revolution which are relevant to Greek Australians.

“The first thing is the foundational role of ancient Greece in Western civilisation, and an idolisation of ancient Greece and what relationship that had to the uprising,” he said. “I also want to talk about the role of the diaspora, the people outside of Greece in the formation of the modern Greek nation. Equally, our story of multiculturalism in Australia and how this helps us to understand the uprising, and finally the shared values and bonds between our two wonderful countries,” he said, adding that celebrating Greece’s independence is a “unique experience” for migrants as the Greek War of Independence drew support from the diaspora.


Speaking of the Filiki Etairia, the friendly brotherhood founded in Odessa, Ukraine, in 1814, he said that the revolt commenced when Alexandros Ypsilandis, leader of the society, crossed over to Moldovia in 1820. Mr Papastergiadis added that with “multiculturalism forming the backbone of our society, I think we’re in the very unique capacity here in Australia to form connections with our own cultural heritage but, as well, to forge bonds with the history and culture of other nations and this is precisely what we’re doing here today.”
“As you can see, it’s a shared journey,” he said, while adding that events have swung full circle in Odessa, in the Ukraine now, “fighting for the same ideals of freedom and democracy that we are in fact celebrating here today”.

No one in the room understood these heartfelt words more than Liberal Opposition leader Matthew Guy, who described the situation of his family there. He vowed Ukraine would show the same fighting spirit as the Greeks while pointing to the commonalities of these two nations.
Commending the pride Greek Australians have for their homeland, he pointed to his neighbour Theo in Templestowe, who is always saying, “You’ve got to come with me to Leros. You’ve got to come with me to Lefkada. You’ve got to come with me to the Peloponnese.”

Maria Vamvakinou, Labor MP, told him to take his neighbour’s advice to visit Lefkada as that is where her background is from.


By Mary Sinanidis.
Every year, the brave heroic ex-servicemen of the Hellenic RSL of Melbourne gather together at the Australian Hellenic Memorial created in their honour. This year was no exception, and around a few hundred people were lucky to attend ceremony for the 201st anniversary of Greek Independence.
It was mainly veterans of many ages, standing stiff to attention, though some fingers trembled as they held onto flags. They were men who fought for freedom, honouring their ancestors. But interspersed among them were also children from Alphington Grammar and a few representatives from other schools.


Maria Vamvakinou MP, member for Calwell, an ex-teacher, said she remembered “growing up in the Greek Orthodox church learning Greek in the afternoon school and the most significant thing that was taught to us apart from Plato, Socrates and Aristotle was the Greek revolution”.
Before reading the message of Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese, she said, “The Greek revolution was fought and was won by the Greek people, whether they were the clergy, whether they were members of the business community, whether they were the wealthy, the revolutionaries, the women, the men, the children… As a collective they fought for their freedom and they won it and the importance of that freedom is taught to all of us through our Greek heritage.”



This was her response to a question by Greek Consul General to Melbourne Emmanuel Kakavelakis, who asked: “Who created the Revolution?” Casting the spotlight on all the collectives of the revolution, he reminded people of the different groups that made Greece’s freedom possible.
Soldiers, protectors of freedom in more recent battles, decorated soldiers, wearing medals of valour from either Greece or Australia listened solemnly before heading to the Shrine for a special ceremony and then back to the RSL for traditional cod fish and skordalia.


By Panagiotis Dalatariof
Manto Mavrogenous was a dominant figure of the Greek Revolution of 1821. She devoted herself wholly to the ideals and the justnesses of the Freedom of the nation, selflessly offering her love for her country.
Her ancestors were born and lived in Paros. Her great-grandfather, Ioannis Mavrogenis, settled in Marmara of Paros and his son was Nikolaos Mavrogenis, Ruler of Moldovlachia, who built the three marble fountains located on the main street of Parikia. Ioanni’s other son, Demetrios, brought to life Petros Mavrogenis, father of Manto.
Manto was an educated, beautiful cosmopolitan, tall and imposing woman, who spoke French, Italian and Turkish, and was influenced by the values and ideas of the Enlightenment.
She visited Greece at the age of 19 and her immense love for her homeland came from her uncle Reverend Nikolaos Mavros. Thus, she allegedly made the decision to devote herself to the struggle for freedom by offering her entire fortune on the altar of the righteous of the nation.

The website “parianostpos.gr”, reports on Manto’s devotion to the fatherland and the struggle for freedom:
“With ships equipped at her own expense she pursued Algerians who ravaged the Cyclades, equipped two manned ships with which she pursued pirates who attacked Mykonos and other islands of the Cyclades. In October 1822, the Mykonians repulsed the Turks under her leadership. She also equipped and supplied 150 men to campaign in the Peloponnese and sent forces and financial support to Samos when the island was threatened by the Turks. She sent a force of 50 men to the Peloponnese who participated in the capture of Tripolitsa by the Greeks.
“She spent money for the relief of the soldiers and their families but also for the preparation of a campaign in northern Greece, with the support of many Philhellenes. She formed a fleet of six ships and infantry consisting of 16 groupswith fifty men each and took part in operations at Karystos in 1822. She financed the campaign of Chios, but failed to prevent the massacre of Chios. She reinforced Nikitaras with 50 men in the Battle of Dervenakia. When the Ottoman fleet appeared in the Cyclades, she financed the supplies and equipment of the 200 men who fought the enemy and provided shelter to two thousand people who had survived the first siege of Missolonghi. Her men participated in many other battles such as those of Pelion, Fthiotida, Livadia”.

Everything she had, movable and immovable property, money and jewelery she offered to the National Liberation Struggle.
It is estimated that 700,000 piastres, an amount incredible for those times, were spent by her for the Hellenic cause. In 1825, while her resources were depleted, she was forced to divest her family’s properties in the Cyclades islands.
After the murder of Kapodistrias (1831), survival problems were exacerbated, while relations with her family deteriorated. She was accused of squandering the large family property. She was then forced to address a letter to King Otto and explain her situation to him. She never received an answer.

She tasted the ungreatfulness of her homeland as when she applied for a pension as a retired fighter in front of a state official, she was asked: “and what did you do for your homeland?” and the proud Manto to the end, replied: “Nothing…”
The last years of her life, she spent them as a poor, forgotten and impoverished woman. In a state of destitution, she dwelt in Paros where some of her relatives lived. In July 1840, she contracted typhoid fever and died forgotten by all in Paros, the island of her ancestors in 1848. Her body passed through the central alleys of Parikia and ended at the Holy Church of Panagia Ekatontapyliani where the funeral service was performed.
Giannis Vasiliopoulos: “Manto did not stay with her cousins in Paros”
The president of Friends of the Municipal Library of Paros, Giannis Vasiliopoulos, spoke to the Greek Herald about the family that hosted Manto Mavrogenous in the last years of her life.
“The House today belongs to the Kritikos family. This house belonged to the Madibella family. When it hosted Manto it belonged to Margarita Madibella.
She was single then and later married a notator of Andros. Manto became their matron of honour. Manto, in Paros, had cousins but they didn’t host her.
The Madibella family, as a family of Paros, appears in 17th-century documents to be konsouli (official representative of state) of England. Great family, educated, who hosted Manto.

This house is one storey in Potamos area of Parikia. In the year 1986-1987, the owner of the house, Mrs Kritikos wanted to rent it due to tourism. So, she did some changes to the building without permission. The house was listed in 1987 under Melina Mercouri. She built a floor above, changing its facade. But she did not change the sign of the house.
When the house changed its appearance, people became very upset with the owner. “What are you doing? This house is important to our country,” they told her.
The house from then until now is preserved and belongs to the Kritikos family”.
TGH: This house was never used as a museum?
“No, alas, never! This family never stayed in. It was rented from 1980 onwards when tourism started picking up”.
TGH: So you tell us that such a historic house over the years was used as a simple house for accommodation?
“Yes, yes… Now I don’t know if it is currently inhabited. But it was used to meet tourist needs. Especially the upper floor that was then made. This is the story of this house.
It is a house from the 15th-16th centuries. Parikia has been inhabited for 5,000 years continuously. With the excavations that took place you see the prehistoric, the archaic, the classical and so on”.

TGH: The house where Manto Mavrogenous stayed, you told us is in the area “Potamos”, in the alley that leads to Panagia Ekatontapiliani. Right?
“Yes… Manto, when she died, was buried in Ekatontapyliani. In 1962, when Orlandos, that great professor of Archaeology, did the restoration, tried to find the tomb. He used as reference the story that she was buried there in the Lieutenant General’s uniform. However, as he reveals in his report, he found nothing.
Corres, a writer, says she was buried northwest of Ekatontapyliani. The name “Mavrogenous” was engraved on the tomb, but they found no insignia. Others said that her bones were taken to Mykonos to local people that belonged to her family. Now if her bones were in Paros we don’t know.
TGH: Are members from the Mavrogenous family living in Paros?
“Yes there are. Perhaps the Dimitrakopoulos are the continuation of the family”.
The rare 15-page book from Nikiphoros Kypraios ‘ speech about Manto Mavrogenous
At the Primary School of Paros on the 25th of March 1926 anniversary of the Greek Independence Day, Nikiforos Kypraios – retired officer- was invited to speak about the national heroes and witnesses of the revolution with extensive reference to the life of the heroine Manto Mavrogenous.
As a man of insight he had the providence that a small book of 15 pages should be printed containing the discourse he uttered on that day. So this speech has remained alive and will remain forever. Very likely, of course, it was printed by the association of “ALL PARIANS of EKATONTAPYLIANI” since it bears the stamp with their logo. This small in size and volume book is quite rare and this is because due to its simple binding it is easy for someone not to pay proper attention to it and easily go to the bin.
* Special thanks to Michael Roubanos for providing rare photographic material

Renowned photographer, Effy Alexakis, is set to showcase her extensive repertoire of photographs showcasing the lives of Greek Australians since 1982 at a special exhibition for The Greek Festival of Sydney.
The exhibition titled, ‘Forty Photographs – A Year at a Time,’ will run from March 28 – April 3 at the N. Smith Gallery in Paddington.
When invited by the Greek Festival Chair, Nia Karteris, to present an exhibition for the 40th anniversary of the Greek Festival of Sydney in 2022, Alexakis selected an image for every year, as her own documentary photographic work had also reached this milestone.
She accessed her vast archive on the Greek Australian experience and selected one contemporary image to represent each year in order to reveal the changing face of Greek Australians since 1982.

Each photograph evidences salient aspects or elements significant to the personal journey of the photographer and her evolving understanding of her community and heritage – both within Australia and overseas – and in so doing, provides a unique visual insight into the ongoing story of Greek-Australia.
All photographs are titled and captioned offering viewers a deeper personal interaction.
Alexakis’ visual odyssey offers Greek-Australian viewers a unique look at their immediate past by one of their own, and the broader Australian community, a personal visual diary documenting one of its most emblematic cultural groups within the flux and challenges of a contemporary multicultural society.
‘FORTY PHOTOGRAPHS – A YEAR AT A TIME’
Photographer: Effy Alexakis
27 March – 3 April 2022 (LAUNCH 29th March @ 6.30pm)
N. Smith Gallery
6 Napier Street, PADDINGTON, NSW

By Professor Anastasios M. Tamis*
Hellas initially functioned as a group of compatriot, homodox, homophone people who had for 1500 years been organised in the political system of the city-state, and despite their internal conflicts and any socio-economic and political restrictions, they managed to create and highlight, on behalf of the people of the world, the science, research, political systems, arts, literature, religion and everything, and everything else today that constitutes the basis of most countries of our planet.
It was Alexander the Macedonian and his father Philip, the people who “persuaded” the Greeks to unite and then join the Campaign of the East against the Persians, transplanting Hellas in every neighbourhood of Asia and Africa.
In the years that followed, Hellas, its ideology, the components of its culture, and its dynamics were transplanted into the Eastern Roman State (Byzantium), where they were then reconciled with Christianity and a Richer Hellas emerged, having liturgically grafted the characteristics of its civilization with other elements of the Anatolia.

This was followed by the stone years of the Ottoman occupation of about 500 years (1430-1913), where the nation was enslaved, but Hellas as a culture, as a political and social system, as an ideology, was adopted by Europeans and reformed through the Renaissance, initially, and then through Neo-humanism, the Enlightenment and Romanticism, this Greece was presented and established as a European evolution, as a Western World.
However, after 3,500 years of existence of the nation of the Greeks (The Nation), Greece was eventually created. A Greece whose borders had no historical, ethnological, political, and cultural basis. Its borders were shaped by the mighty Powers of the earth, through international treaties. Hellas of the Greeks spread across the coasts of Asia Minor, the Balkans and of course solid Greek populations inhabited the countries of the Black Sea and Europe.
Greece of the Great Powers was confined, as a state structure, to the last rocks of the Balkan Peninsula, where the ancient metropolitan Greek world had essentially lived and flourished, without its colonies, without the Cleruchies and the compact Hellenism of Ionia and Magna Graecia (Calabria and Sicily).
Until 1830 the Greeks were members of a nation without a state, a people without borders, a national entity (identified only religiously as Orthodox), scattered in empires throughout Europe, Asia and Africa. It was still the years of “diastole“, i.e. the expanding system of Empires, before the “systole”, the contracted system, with the creation of Nationalism. This relationship of contraction-expansion of the human rhythm of political maturation has been in place since the Sumerian era, at least 6,000 years ago (currently, President Putin is attempting to expand his state into an empire, trampling on Ukrainian ethnism).
The historical Greek Diaspora in 1830 spread to the area of Anatolia (Asia Minor), the Black Sea countries, Russia, Austro-Hungary, Central Europe, Italy, and the Balkans. When Greece was recognized by the Great Powers of Europe in 1830, it did not have a single kilometer of roads. Not a port, not a hospital. Not a single university. Its productive base was destroyed after ten years of war and the passing of Ibrahim. It had no political tradition of self-determination and democratic governance in the previous two thousand years. It had no government buildings. It lacked any taxation system, land register. It did not maintain trade relations with abroad.
Greece in 1830 was the most impoverished and desperate corner of Europe.

THE SYNDROME OF PSOROKOSTAINA
However, through these ruins and social and political impoverishment, emerged modern Greece, a country that still teaches justice, humanity, freedom, and social progress. Of course, in its last 200 years, Greece had its own course and its own distinct evolution. Modern and contemporary Greece is not the result of a rigid slave trade, nor is it the result of colonial bulimia. Its progress was initially based on its rural world, on its minerals and mainly on its extra-Helladic seafarers, the gigantic pillars of support, i.e. the shipowners, the expatriate Hellenism and the Philhellenes.
In general, our generation grew up in a myth, that of the Psorokostaina. In the schools and in the media, in public gatherings and in the cafes, there was a poor-progressive Greece, a Greece of successive bankruptcies, a Greece of Souris, of Varnalis, of coups d’états, dictatorships, Civil War. A Greece of the murderers of Lambrakis, of the Junta, a Greece in constant political “plaster”, a Greece with rigidities, with corruption, with a client state, with party gangs. Finally, and generally the image of Greece was presented unjustly deformed, deliberately, or unintentionally falsified and corrupted.
In our effort to convince our interlocutors, especially when we feel numb in the face of a state negligence or being in a difficult relationship with the State of the Greeks, we resort to such aphorisms at the expense of our common homeland. But we are making serious mistakes in such an assessment, we are making an unrealistic assessment, without offering any real criteria. Our assessment of Greece is usually emotional, barbarically depressing that causes strong injustices not only to our recent ancestors, but also projects a false image of Greece both inwards and outwards. In the way we perceive Greece of the last 200 years, we often do not have reliable methods to analyze the happenings and most importantly, we ignore or do not want to include all the criteria that shaped the evaluation our modern nation-state.
As to methods: In science there is the concept of “initial conditions”, i.e. the situation prevailing in a system (physical, chemical, biological, social, etc.) at the time when an experiment or a systematic observation has begun. Different initial conditions cause different results. Without being aware of the initial conditions or deliberately wanting to reduce “self-destructively” our country (we Greeks are competitive, non-aligned, and self-destructive), we make a comparison with emotional charge. We are trying to degrade, out of ignorance I would say in good faith, our country, the happenings in Greece, to degrade our cities, to denigrate the quality of life, health, and the prevailing justice, to present our cities as inferior in quality, in appearance and in beauty.

We ignore or forget that Madrid, London, Paris, Amsterdam, or Brussels, which we admire and compare with Athens and Thessaloniki, were built mainly with the proceeds of colonial empires, which allowed the metropolises to accumulate the wealth that financed the creation of the bourgeoisie, in an era without mass production technology and industry, at a time when the slave trade and the humiliation of man were constituting government policies. The cities in Greece were built by free people, without slave trade and colonial economies. They were built by the Greeks and Philhellenes of the Diaspora, enriched with architectural ornaments mainly by the Greek Benefactors of the Diaspora. Museums, beautiful buildings, hospitals, cultural centers, girls’ schools, gymnasiums, chambers of Commerce and the Arts, were built by the sensitized expatriate, the expatriate Hellenism. The ship owners and the leaders of the Greek Communities of the Balkans, Europe and The Americans were the first to be convinced by Rigas and Korais of the freedom of the Greeks. The first revolutions against the Turks did not start from Kalamata and Patras, as they are occasionally presented in our history, but by the Greek ruling leaders of Moldova, Wallachia, and Romania. In Iasi of Romania fell the young lads of the Sacred Band; from Italy came the first volunteers against the Turks in Epirus. From the Hellenism of the Diaspora the Filiki Eteria was founded, from the Hellenism of the Diaspora the first Philhellenes were initiated in Austria, Switzerland, and France. And when the Greek Revolution collapsed and Braimis was leveling Greece, they were again the leaders of the Diaspora Hellenism who kept the Great Powers in the host countries actively against the Ottomans, who were pushing them to rally against the Turks.
THE CONTEMPORARY GREECE
But let’s also look at some evidence that shows how unfair we are, when we portray with self-sarcasm and unjust manner, all that Hellenism has achieved, which compose the real comparative picture of Greece. What Hellenism achieved, at least after the Second World War, is indeed extremely remarkable and should make us proud, us and our children. Immediately after the war and the Civil War, it was the Greek shipowners along with the USA who rescued the collapsed economy of Japan. It was Greece of 1950-1960 that stood up as the most growing economy in the world, which was historically invoked as the “The Greek Miracle”. It was Hellenism (Greek and Cypriot) that created today the largest naval power in the world, representing 34% of the world’s ship power. It was the small Greece that raised the United Europe, almost as a founding member. It was Greece that entered one of the first countries in the Eurozone.
But, even at the level of the common man, the citizen, Greece is a model, a motif, and an example, in all aspects of human life. According to the U.N. Population Service, Greece has the 19th highest life expectancy in the world and the 10th highest in Europe. Specifically, the life expectancy of the Greek is 82.9 years, while that of the USA is 79.11 years. The difference of 3.69 years in life expectancy is significant when one considers that it corresponds to the difference that the USA (79.11) has with Mexico (75.41) and Nicaragua (75.23), countries that belong to the group of countries of the so-called third world. To put it simply, the difference that the USA has from Nicaragua in life expectancy is the same difference that Greece has with the USA. Life expectancy holistically reflects the quality of life of a society because it incorporates, in one number, the health system, availability and quality of food, quality of housing, education, security and crime, etc. It is simple: the more peaceful, solidarity-based, and prosperous a society is, the longer the life expectancy; for everyone, not just for the elite and the rich people.
Greece’s health system, not only the ESY but also the private health institutions, based on the World Health Organization (WHO) ranking, is the 14th most successful health system in the world [Source: https://www. who. int/healthinfo/paper30.pdf? ua=1] and the 8th in Europe. Here are some of them: The Netherlands 17, Britain 18, Switzerland 20, Sweden 23, Germany 25. The United States of America is in position 37. Because they may produce the world’s leading medical technology, but they are in position 97 in the world in the average American’s access to quality health services.

Freedom House is an American non-profit organization, which since 1941 creates a global ranking of countries based on the personal and civil liberties of their citizens and funds actions to promote freedoms around the world. In 2021, Greece is ranked among the “Free” countries of the world, with a score of 87 out of 100. The United States ranks 13 places below Greece with a score of 83 at the 100. It is also worth noting here the following: the last time the election result in Greece was contested was in 1961. Today, we have reached a point of democratic maturity and administrative efficiency that two hours after the closure of the ballot box we know with great confidence the winner and by the next day at noon we know the full composition of the new parliament, that is, who were elected MPs. By contrast, in other countries, even the U.S., the election result has been officially challenged at least three times. Even in the field of freedom of justice, Greece holds a prominent position and surpasses the U.S. by at least 35 points in the world rankings. Those guilty of Lambrakis’ murder were arrested, tried, convicted, and imprisoned in a few months. The murderers of Pavlos Fyssas are in prison, as are the much-discussed murderers of November 17th. In the U.S., the murderers of dozens of African Americans in the 1960s and 1970s, and most recent years, were never arrested, never tried. They remain still “unknown” and their crimes “unsolved”!
Of course, in the field of organization, the so-called “civil liberties”, in the area of the creation of a citizen’s consciousness (the Greeks remain unrepentantly private, selfish and self-centered), we are still behind compared to other Western countries. Here it is necessary for the provided education to reflect on its responsibilities, as well as the family, since we are still raising children and grandchildren with the unheard harmful and antisocial slogan, “you take care of your own house, do not meddle, guard yourself!!!”, as if there is no society and no fellow man around us…
*Professor Anastasios M. Tamis taught at Universities in Australia and abroad, was the creator and founding director of the Dardalis Archives of the Hellenic Diaspora and is currently the President of the Australian Institute of Macedonian Studies (AIMS).

The Australian has released its annual list of Australia’s 250 wealthiest individuals and among the names are 11 Australians of Greek heritage. Four out of these 11 have made their debut on the list.
Who are they and how have they become so successful in life? The Greek Herald finds out.

Nick Politis is the Owner of WFM Motors and Director of AP Eagers. He is the most successful car salesman in Australia, with an empire that includes dozens of his own car dealers in Sydney, Melbourne and Queensland. He is also the Chairman of the NRL club, Sydney Roosters.

Theo Karedis is the co-founder of Theo’s Liquor and Arkadia Property Group. The Karedis family fortune stems from the Theo’s chain of bottle shops sold to Coles in 2002. Arkadia owns 25 mostly retail properties around Australia.

Nicholas Paspaley is the Executive Chairman of the Paspaley Group of Companies. The Group has a pearl retail business, an aviation and marine services division, pastoral and tourism holdings, and a property portfolio.

Dennis Bastas is the Founder, Chairman and CEO of Arrotex Pharmaceuticals. He has made his debut on the Rich List this year. Arrotex makes about one-third of the drugs dispensed under the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme and turns over $1.1 billion annually.

Father and son duo, Terry and Arthur Tzaneros, own ACFS Port Logistics, the largest privately owned container logistics operator in Australia, and freight logistics firm, AGS World Transport. This is their debut on the list.

Nick Andrianakos is the Founder of Milemaker Petroleum and Nikos Property. This is his debut on the Rich List. The Milemaker chain comprised 54 sites when it was sold to Caltex in a $94 million deal in late 2016. By then, Andrianakos was already investing in commercial property and crucially he also kept the freehold sites of the petrol stations.

Con Makris is the Chairman of Makris Group and although he has been gradually selling down his property portfolio in recent years, he retains substantial assets on the Gold Coast and shopping centres in Adelaide and Melbourne.

Spiros Alysandratos is the founder of one of Australia’s biggest backroom travel companies, Consolidated Travel. His business sells ticketing technology and services to airlines and travel agents, and also travel insurance products.

The Stamoulis wealth is found in Melbourne commercial property. Harry oversees assets that include office buildings and distribution centres. The family also supports Melbourne’s Hellenic Museum.

Kerry Harmanis is one of Western Australia’s most successful mining executives and investors, making more than $400 million from the sale of his former nickel play Jubilee Mines to Xstrata in a $3.1 billion deal in 2007. He now has shareholdings in several listed mining exploration companies.
Source: The Australian.
